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John Wesley Chisholm

2016 List - Firsts For Nova Scotia

12/29/2015

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In 2016 I'll be listing and discussing some BFI's (Big F$%^king Ideas) to help improve Nova Scotia and concern ourselves with the shape of things to come. I'm planning to post about one a week and collecting 52 ideas. I'll make some appointments and pitch the ones that get the most interest to key players in government and the political parties. That said, I don't think the answer is in government - I think it's in the power of the idea itself.

I'll also be posting a cumulative reading list that vamps simpatico with these ideas. Generally, I'm interested in geopolitics, economics, story, ideas, argument, beauty and self-improvement. I also like the idea of being mechanically minded and technology with user serviceable parts inside.

Nova Scotia could be first in making major economic development, social, ecological and government/bureaucratic breakthroughs. These are ideas for today, 2016 and beyond. Here's a preview of what I'm working on...

  1. Tax Credits for Kickstart
  2. Equity in Kickstart
  3. Nova Scotia Youth Corps
  4. Elders in Education - Sharing the welath of Knowledge in NS
  5. Tiny Houses and Tiny Communities - No rules under 800 Square Feet
  6. Government should start a competing power company.
  7. Tax the banks based on net NS deposits
  8. Online resources – Wikipedia for Nova Scotia that parents can share with children on: Critical Thinking, looking after the planet, esthetic experience, work/business, how not to be racist, history of Nova Scotia, Warden of the North and its institutions
  9. The Pre-amble: A sort of set up for all discussions of politics, policy and the shape of things to come in Nova Scotia. We live in a golden age, we love our friends home and family, we know what a rational argument is, we care about ideas not names, positions or parties, Nova Scotia is among the safest, healthiest, cleanest, happiest, comfortable, stuff-filled and richest countries and the whole history of countries and riches. And a classic reminder that almost all lines are curves.
  10. Free broadband wifi access everywhere. EVERYWHERE.
  11. Asking tourist to come and help… to work… to improve Nova Scotia and actually make the kind of place people would want to visit. They can bring their trucks and tools too.
  12. Letting the rural roads go back to dirt. Offering a genuine backroad experience in a world where it’s really hard to get off the beaten path.
  13. Allow and encourage Air b’n’b without regulation, tax or impediment
  14. A “Visitors Welcome” system where people can stay on farms to eat and take part in whatever is going on without regulation.
  15. A lobster diving season where scuba divers can catch their own with the help of local fishermen.
  16. Being allowed to sleep and camp on beaches.
  17. Allow squatting on crown land.
  18. Allow free anchorage in Bedford basin for any boat/ship any time.
  19. Reopen the Shubie canal
  20. Allow people to pan and dig for gold in real gold producing areas and keep whatever they find without tax or tariff.
  21. Put an end to "Payday Loan" companies that prey on the working poor.
  22. Focus on well-being not growth
    The recognition that countries have not grown happier as they have gotten richer has caused many to question the idea of "growth for the sake of growth." In fact, our dogged pursuit of economic growth has undermined our ability to use natural resources sustainably, as well as the resilience and prosperity of communities across the globe. In the words of Paul Hawken, "We have an economy where we steal from the future, sell it in the present, and call it GDP."
  23. Create a Public Bank with a Local Development Mandate
     Investment and finance are key to any successful jobs strategy. Yet, though credit unions play a vital role in economic development, we are otherwise overly reliant on the big private banks for investment finance. Meanwhile in Germany, a widespread network of publicly owned banks has been crucial to the phenomenal growth of that country since World War II. Known as the 'Sparkassen' and 'Landesbanks', these banks are owned by municipalities, states and the federal government. And in similarly economically successful North Dakota and Alberta, publicly owned banks with a mandate to support local businesses (the Bank of North Dakota and the Alberta Treasury Branch) have supported local job creation since the 1930s. Building on those precedents, we should establish a public Bank with a local development mandate and empower municipalities to establish their own publicly owned banks.
  24. Guarantee a Basic Income
    How come some of the most important jobs in our economy don't get a pay cheque? The unpaid work we do raising children, volunteering and caring for elders sustains our families and communities.
    Demanding a Basic Income Guarantee for everyone would ensure this unpaid work gets the value it deserves. Residents would receive a bare-essentials income no matter what kind of work they do. Other work would be paid in addition to this income. A Basic Income Guarantee could be funded through restructuring existing programs and through higher but fairer taxes, especially from the rich.
    A Basic Income Guarantee would also help us improve the quality of paid jobs in the economy. When leaving a bad job no longer carries the threat of financial ruin, employers would have to provide better working conditions to retain staff. For unions, the Basic Income Guarantee would serve as a baseline strike fund so workers can fight for a fair deal.
    Having basic financial security would free people up to build an economy that works for them, rather than being stuck in an economy that disproportionately benefits the rich. People would have greater freedom to create their own jobs in co-ops, social enterprises and voluntary associations, shifting to a more democratic economy in the process.
  25. Establish a provincial value-add innovation fund. 
    To provide needed start-up capital for regional manufacturing co-operatives proposing to add value to natural resources. The co-operative model such a fund would incentivize is one that is well positioned to leverage skills available locally and provide viable opportunities for economic development in rural communities struggling with the loss of forestry jobs. We sorely needs a value-add strategy for our natural resources sectors: it's the 21st century yet we ship our resources raw like it's still the 19th century.
  26. Invest in mass-transit infrastructure across the province, including improved rail infrastructure between our major population centres and improved linkages to East Coast US. Investing in transit build-out can create between three and eight times the numbers of jobs created by building more highways.
  27. Create a new urban-rural economic development initiative or Ministry to better connect existing and emerging jobs in the knowledge economy, and the skills and finance of our urban centres, to our smaller population centres. The opportunities to share ideas and cross-pollinate would spur innovation in rural regions and communities (and vice versa) in partnership with the various Community Futures offices and municipalities.
  28. Implement a Youth Guarantee
    Youth unemployment is a major problem in Canada and in NS. Rates of youth unemployment today remain significantly higher than pre-recession levels and youth currently fare much worse in unemployment terms, than those above 25. The need to address youth unemployment is heightened by its high impacts; unemployment at the start of a career correlates with lower career earnings. Research shows that even without personally experiencing unemployment, individuals who graduate during periods of high youth unemployment have smaller starting salaries and lower lifetime earnings than those who graduate in better economic times.
    A youth guarantee is a European policy solution that could help NS tackle this problem. It is an umbrella of programs designed around a very basic idea: within a short period of becoming unemployed—say four or six months—every unemployed young person should be offered (guaranteed) either a subsidized job placement, more education, an apprenticeship or a skills training placement. Several European countries have adopted this approach with good results and the EU has recently committed €6 billion in multi-year funding for a Europe-wide youth guarantee.
    A made-in-NS youth guarantee would open the doors to good jobs for more youth through providing valuable work experience or training.
  29. Avoid Groupthink by Looking at the Data
    There are no silver bullets for jump-starting a slow economy, but there are many practical job creation ideas that would work in NS.
    To get to the good stuff, the really powerful, game-changing ideas, we must first shed the shackles of the dogma that has dominated the past forty years. Both conservative and progressive thinkers took the same economics and politics courses in college, scarring them for life. Theories forged from limited hard data—but much ideology—have been given the status of immutable principles not to be transgressed.
    Good jobs will come from eschewing pre-conceived notions that get in the way of taking a hard, sober look at what has been working (and not working) on the ground all over the world. NS will have to learn what effective government really means. Progressives will have to respect what it takes to incentivize private capital to deploy resources.
    My idea for good jobs? Double-down. Use the dogma-busting evidence, unavailable in 1974, but free to all of us in 2014. And do it without a set of ideological blinders.
    And we do, in fact, need to take a closer look at what is happening around the world, and not just in our own minds and backyards. NS is a huge underachiever as a result of the smugness and insularity that an economy based primarily on resource-extraction has allowed. There is hard work to be done in looking up and looking outwards.
  30. Leadocracy -  The number one problem in our province today is broken government. Government is on the wrong path and that path is marked by a sign that says BUREAUCRACY. We need more small L leaders and Leadocracy is a plan for identifying them and getting them to work.
  31. Prosperity
    250 years ago moral and political philosophers began a revolution by thinking about prosperity. From that thinking grew the democratic age, liberty, and equality – the modern age. The notion was that prosperity is a certain maximized mix of health, wealth and happiness for all. Though happiness has proved to be an elusive and difficult to improve, or even prove, concept, we all agree it exists. We’ve come fantastic distances in creating a world where good health is commonplace. However, most of our effort and success has come by creating new wealth.
     
    Where does new wealth come from? Where does it go? What is our public wealth and why is it important?
  32. Education
     
    Democratic change is a long game. There are no quick fixes. There are no easy ways. There are no big box, one-size-fits-all solutions. We are not alone in experiencing these problems and there is nothing new under the sun. History and the experience of other communities shows clearly the path forward is long and wide.
     
    In the long run there is only one solution to every social and economic problem – education.
  33. Talk about beauty - Protecting and enhancing Nova Scotia’s beauty
  34. The Math Problem
  35. Stop Bottom Dragging Trawlers
  36. Transit Oriented Development
  37. Tourism, call centres, development, conventions and immigrants are not the answer
  38. Insurance for all
  39. Small business culture
  40. Money Management for the masses
  41. Tie Minimum Wage to the Cost of Living
  42. A broadcaster for Nova Scotia
  43. NS Produce and Distribution Network
  44. The Coast (line) is clear
  45. No Citizen Left Behind
  46. SOS – Save Our Shipwrecks
  47. Cities – unamalgamated and human sized
  48. Education and Purpose in Life
  49. Seeking Prosperity
  50. The four things you can do with Money
  51. The four places wealth comes from
  52. An Optimal Currency Zone - lessons from the European Union
  53. Anti-covert propaganda legislation - each time a politician makes a statemetn he/she must make clear whether they are stating their own personal beliefs or government or party propaganda which they have been directed to impart in a specific way. This will help bring stifling party politics into check and help voter citizen make better choices about who and how they want to be represented.
  54. Stop spending on things like tourism promotion, In the digital social age it's wasted money, and is only spent to appease powerful supporters not do anything for actual customers.

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    John Wesley

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